Next time any of you guys meet me in person, remind me about this thread and I'll show you a pretty good kid on hip knife protocol/fight procedure...
Next time any of you guys meet me in person, remind me about this thread and I'll show you a pretty good kid on hip knife protocol/fight procedure...
It's also a good idea to teach your children what to do during certain situations- codewords, what to do if they get separated from you, how to act when strangers approach them and so on.
From when my sons were young, they were taught STOP if they were ever to get lost-
Stop
Think
Observe
Plan
It saved us a lot of grief. When my son was about 10, we were bicycling in a city my son was unfamiliar with. I cut through a park I used to play at as a kid and got going too fast for him to catch up. No big deal, I thought, I'll just stop and wait for him. After a couple of minutes, it became obvious something happened.
I backtracked and found him by the trail, crying. I bombed through that section so fast, he had no idea where I went or where he should go. So he stopped and waited. When I got to him he said "I didn't see where you went, so I did what I was taught- STOP. I stayed right here."
The point is, teaching kids what to do ahead of time can save everyone a lot trouble. Because my son knew what he had to do and did it, I found him in minutes instead of hours
Last edited by MistWolf; 10-10-2016 at 03:36 AM.
We wish to thank the United Network Command for Law and Enforcement, without whose assistance this program would not have been possible.
Given pure choice....these days if I can I carry a polymer double column 9 mm service pistols purely for less manipulations needed to keep the pistol in a fight. I look at this more based on a manipulations under stress formula. I will almost always have that gun backed up with a snub revolver that shines in every single area the service pistol doesn't, and basically look at them as a complimentary system. Some situations, scenarios, environments, policies and legalities will change that, but it is my preferred route with my urban lifestyle.
Just a Hairy Special Snowflake supply clerk with no field experience, shooting an Asymetric carbine as a Try Hard. Snarky and easily butt hurt. Favorite animal is the Cape Buffalo....likely indicative of a personality disorder.
"If I had a grandpa, he would look like Delbert Belton".
I work with the kids every time we go out somewhere. Know the path from the vehicle to where we are going is their priority 1, because the car is our default rally point. If somebody is lost for more than 10-15 mins, everyone meets back at the car. They are old enough that they can GTFO with one or both of us covering. I'm glad for tha, because fighting with a toddler or infant in tow just sounds like a nightmare.